OT: Book and Podcast Recommendations

Submitted by taistreetsmyhero on April 4th, 2020 at 11:26 PM

Give us one book and one podcast episode.

Book: Wild Seed

https://b-ok.cc/book/1989773/6638f7

First book in an epic sci-fi fantasy series that centers around the story of two immortal Africans named Doro and Anyanwu.

I'd recommend the entire Seed to Harvest series, but this was my favorite. I've been trying to read more minority women authors, and Octavia Butler is a goddess.

Podcast: https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/the-infantorium/

The insane story of the birth of neonatology and the carnival doctor who invented incubators to save premature babies...and displayed them to the masses at festivals and world fairs.

WindyCityBlue

April 4th, 2020 at 11:29 PM ^

I know it’s not that hipster-ish and too mainstream, but the Joe Rogan podcast with Bill Maher maybe 6 months ago was absolutely fascinating.  Very easy to find on YouTube. 

TheTruth41

April 5th, 2020 at 9:00 AM ^

Thumbing through the Joe Rogan podcasts you can find some great long format conversations. My personal favorite was when he had David Sinclair on. I’d listen to them in order as he’s been on twice. His book dives more into what he does which is a geneticist for Harvard doing research on why we age and why in the future it’ll be considered a disease. Dude is in his 50s and looks like he’s in his 30s. His book is called Lifespan: Why We Age and Why We Don’t Have To. Been taking NMN ever since along with resveratrol. The tests he’d do with mice were fascinating. 
 

Listened to his podcast with Tim Pool again yesterday and seems quite relevant to what’s going on now. He just distrusts the media from working with news organizations previously and now does work independently. He’s left center but a rather fair moderate perspective. 
 

Loved Joe’s podcast the last time he had Alex Jones on purely for the entertainment factor. Dude can get far out in the deep end quick. If you’ve got 4 hours to burn it’s an entertaining 4 hours and everyone right now has 4 hours to burn. 

Sopwith

April 5th, 2020 at 2:35 PM ^

I have tried several random Joe Rogan podcasts to try and figure out why he's consistently up near the top of the podcast charts and for the life of me I don't get it. He's about an intelligent as the average comedian and more than the typical UFC fighter, so there's that, but I never find anything insightful or laugh-out-loud funny unless it's from the guest. I'm baffled why people find him compelling but clearly a LOT of people do. It feels like the podcast version of coffee, which I have no taste for but wish I was a part of that whole shared cultural experience in a way.

Plankton

April 4th, 2020 at 11:30 PM ^

If you like true crime, there is a new one called counter clock. It’s a present day reporter digging in to an old unsolved murder. It’s really good. I think the case will get solved. 

4godkingandwol…

April 4th, 2020 at 11:33 PM ^

Was just thinking about posting one of these. I finally finished the Wheel of Time series. 1.5 years of my life.
 

Looking for a good non fiction book. Things like Factfulness, thinking fast and slow, etc. really interest me. 

Teeba

April 5th, 2020 at 12:13 AM ^

The Wheel of Time took me 10-15 years to finish, but that wasn’t my fault. I started reading after book 5 was published. Jordan was slightly faster writing than Martin, but then he died, and that added another few years.

I’m currently reading, “A New World Begins,” a history of the French Revolution. It’s fascinating how a grain shortage and hunting rights (or lack thereof) led to such a huge societal upheaval. Not to mention the massive debt the Crown ran up helping us defeat the Brits. I had to chuckle at the mention of the Marquis de Dreux-Breze. And I keep picturing Brienne as a giant, blonde, female Knight.

Edit: I just checked the publication dates. It was more like 20 years for me.

BlueWolverine02

April 5th, 2020 at 1:28 AM ^

1.5 years is nothing.  I started back in 1996.  Back then he was putting out one book every 2 years.  Between the long gap between books and the slog, ended up putting the series down.  Decided to give it another try and got stuck in the slog again.  Then last year, since they are working on the show, decided to suck it up and do a 3rd reread but this time power through.  

Now if only GRRM would finish his books already.

victors2000

April 5th, 2020 at 8:17 AM ^

I've made at least three efforts to read the series, getting further along each time, but I just get tired of it and move on to something else. I got to book 10 or 11 the last time but the quality of the writing had gone south some by then. I hear Sanderson did a good job wrapping up the saga; Oh well, there's always next decade.

Kilo

April 5th, 2020 at 1:33 PM ^

Also finished Wheel of Time recently.  Took me about a year.  Parts felt like a slog but it was rewarding.  Thought Sanderson did a good job finishing.

 

Speaking of, halfway through The Stormlight Archive and its great.

 

Also recommend The First Law Trilogy by Joe Abercrombie.  Dark but entertaining if you like fantasy.

m9tt

April 5th, 2020 at 2:20 AM ^

Lately, I've been filling my plate with really light and fun media to put my mind at ease. 

If you're looking for a light-hearted yet somewhat-relevant to current events, I'd suggest The Gone-Away World by Nick Harkaway. It's the story of two best friends and the story of an apocalyptic event known as the "Go-Away War." Think intellectual literary fiction mashed up with popcorn action flick with a dash of gong fu. The Hike by Drew Magary also scratches a similar itch, just on a smaller, more personal level. 

Podcast-wise, the disaster episodes of the Shutdown Fullcast are always enjoyable. If you enjoy fantasy drafts for no reason (so, Draftageddon?), I'd recommend All Fantasy Everything. Specific episodes I'd suggest are:

  • People You Want on Your Side in a Fight - Kyle Kinane (EP 58)
  • MTV Shows - Katie Nolan (EP 70) 
  • Things You've Never Done But Are Pretty Sure You'd Be Good At - Zac Toscani (EP 141)
  • Casting a Heist Movie - Jake Weismen & Matt Ingebretsen (EP 66)
  • Songs to Get the Dance Floor Going at a Wedding - James Corden (EP 132)

(Just a fair warning that there are a good 20-30 minutes of small talk at the beginning of almost every AFE episode, so skip on ahead if you don't want to sit through that... But if you're not one for conversational bunny trails of no real importance, then this podcast probably isn't for you).  

The Shredder

April 5th, 2020 at 11:06 AM ^

I highly disagree that the sequels are a huge drop off. I will say the 2nd messiah isn't my favorite but the 3rd children of Dune is amazing. The 4th god emperor is really interesting since it takes place 3500 years after the first book. 5 is action packed and 6 I'm not crazy about but ended very cool. Was supposed to be a final 7th but Herbert passed before it was done. 

My rankings of the books are 1,3,5,4,2,6

 

Don

April 5th, 2020 at 12:14 PM ^

I tried reading Dune soon after it was initially published in 1965. Even though I'd been reading adult sci-fi since I was a kid courtesy of my dad's SF library, I got bored after about 50 pages and never finished it. 

For me, "The Mote in God's Eye" and "The Gripping Hand" by Niven and Pournelle were far more compelling. Couldn't put them down until finished.

LBSS

April 5th, 2020 at 6:48 AM ^

Book recommendation: Gonna cheat and give two, a nonfiction and a fiction. Nonfiction: Coming Into the Country, by John McPhee. A masterpiece of longform essay writing, about Alaska and Alaskans. Fiction: The Earthsea Cycle, by Ursula Le Guin. High fantasy doesn't get any better. 

Podcast: Criminal, by Phoebe Judge. True crime but not serialized, just these odd, often beautiful little vignettes. 

Also, re: Octavia Butler, I read Kindred a couple years ago and thought it was only okay. But I'm reading Parable of the Sower right now and, to quote Brian, I be like dang.

taistreetsmyhero

April 5th, 2020 at 11:09 AM ^

The Disposessed by Le Guin is one of my favorite books. I haven’t read enough of her stuff, will definitely check out The Earthsea Cycle.

I liked Kindred a lot, but can understand why it isn’t for everyone. Parable of the Sower is the first work I read by Octavia Butler. Probably better to start there than with the Patternist series. And I agree, no better way to describe that masterpiece.

evenyoubrutus

April 5th, 2020 at 7:35 AM ^

I don't listen to podcasts enough to recommend one, so I'll recommend two books.

If you're into horror, Bird Box by Josh Malerman is one of the creepiest books I've ever read. It's one of only three books that have actually scared me. BONUS: it takes place in southeast Michigan 

Another one that freaked me out is Harvest Home by Thomas Tryon. It's a slow burn, and a little hard to get through the first two acts but the payoff is... possibly one of the most disturbing endings to a book ever. For me, certainly the most disturbing I've ever read.

(The third book that scared me is The Exorcist)

ThePonyConquerer

April 5th, 2020 at 7:36 AM ^

For books, Dear Evan Hansen: The Novel and Be More Chill. 

But BMC is kinda may not be your cup of tea. It's set in HS and mention a lot of *cough* HS things like drugs, sex, etc.

For podcasts, I've been listening somewhat to a farming one called Off The Husk. It's a farming podcast.

outsidethebox

April 5th, 2020 at 7:37 AM ^

Everyone should read the Yuval Noah Harari books-"Sapiens" and "Homo Deus"...read "Sapiens" first. His assessments and critiques of who, why and what we are as human beings is most fascinating-as are his thought processes. 

And I mean it when I suggest that everyone should read these two works. Profound theses being offered here. 

Additionally, Harari is also included in Nick Hanauer's Pitchfork Economic Podcast: "What's the trick in trickle-down".

1VaBlue1

April 5th, 2020 at 8:09 AM ^

Sapiens is one of the best, most interesting, works I've ever read.  Homo Deus was also damn good, but I found myself not as interested in the content.  But only very slightly so - where I could listen to Sapiens for 90 minutes without break, I got through 60 minutes of Homo Deus.

I've read hundreds (perhaps more than a thousand?  Who counts that?) of books throughout my life, and I can honestly say that Sapiens is the one I'd recommend more often than any other.

Mgoscottie

April 5th, 2020 at 7:51 AM ^

I just read Thinking Fast and Slow and I loved it. Now I'm going through Behave which is equally fantastic. Both are dense. 

Podcast that's great for kids (upper elementary ish aged) is Sawbones about failed medical procedures from history. The book they wrote is good too. 

will

April 5th, 2020 at 8:18 AM ^

Shantaram was recommended to me when I joined a large international bank. It's not the best book I've read, but interesting fictional insight into cultural history in India/Afghanistan.

 

victors2000

April 5th, 2020 at 8:27 AM ^

If you are into mythology, 'Mythos', by Stephen Fry is great. An excellent take on Greek mythology, with plenty of humor sprinkled in. If you listen to audio books, he does a great job narrating the tale as well.

1VaBlue1

April 5th, 2020 at 8:32 AM ^

The only podcast I regularly listen to is Brian's, so...  For books, I have several reco's.

Overall best I can remember reading - Sapiens.  Its a history of mankind.  A very complex web of anthropology, biology, science, and religion broken down into terms laymen can clearly understand.  It's not 'sciency' at all, but isn't exactly a light read, either.  

Most light hearted and entertaining - Catch-22.  Many stories about different characters, set in WWII, where each character's arc comes together at the end.  There are some great comedic parts, and some fantastically written tear-jerking parts.  I've read it several times.

Best business story - Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco.  The story of the leveraged buyout that RJ Reynolds made of Nabisco back in the 80's.  This was the first of the mega-LBO's that are still popular today, and the book is a fascinating read of the billionaires behind it all.

If the defense industry piques some interest, try Running Critical.  It details the fight to get the Los Angeles class SSN (fast attack submarine) built and commissioned.